Top 5 Plans

To find the right travel insurance plan, you want to know which plans have worked best for other customers. All of our travel insurance reviews were submitted by customers who purchased a plan on our site.

You can filter reviews by selecting categories on the left. To see only reviews by people who filed claims, select the Filed Claim option.

Customers rate our travel insurance plans

(4.58 out of 5)

based on 28,131 ratings and reviews.

98% of customers would recommend these plans to a friend or a relative.

THE PLAN PROVIDED THE PROTECTIONS AND THAT WERE IMPORTANT TO ME FOR MY KENYA TRIP AND THE PREMIUM WAS REASONABLE. HAD I NEEDED TO EXERCISE THE PLAN, I FELT CONFIDENT THAT I WOULD BE COVERED FOR UNPLANNED EVENTS. I WOULD DEFINITELY USE THIS PROVIDER AND PLAN FOR FUTURE TRAVELS.

I was reasonably happy with this plan, and would recommend it to other travelers. Before my trip, the government issued an advisory against traveling to Kenya. I called Travelex, and discovered that they would not cover us if we decided to cancel, since the terrorist attack prompting the advisory did not occur in a city on our itinerary. That is in the policy, so fair enough, I suppose. We ended up taking the trip, and had no problems in Kenya. However, we missed a connection in London due to inclement weather. We had to pay for food, transportation, and 2 nights at an airport hotel. Plus, we had no baggage, so we had to buy clothes. I called Travelex on our return home to initiate the claim. The representative sent me a form and instructions, and I submitted hotel, food , transportation and clothing receipts. Travelex paid for all but the clothing, and only then let us know that we had to make a separate claim for a baggage delay. I filled out the new form, resubmitted all the clothing receipts, and sure enough, we were reimbursed for the money spent. Everything worked out well in the end, so my only gripe was that the process was slow and had to be repeated, because the representative didn't explain that I would need to make two separate claims.